Publications

Morais and Maia 2017

Lush underwater forests in mesophotic reefs of the Gulf of Guinea

Morais RA, Maia HA

Abstract

The Gulf of Guinea, in West Africa, harbors some of the least known tropical reefs in the world. Shallow reefs in this region are mainly rocky and have limited scleractinian growth (Laborel 1974). Circulation patterns restrict warm waters to the surface layer and cooler waters to below 20–30 m depth (Laborel 1974). Reefs lying below these depths, in cool water, have not yet been described. Here, we report a mesophotic reef ecosystem dominated by black corals between 30 and 50 m depth off Lagoa Azul, northwest São Tomé Island (0°24′33″N, 6°36′30″E). At 28–30 m depth, temperature declined abruptly, from 29 °C to 22 °C, and the reef shifted from rocky/biogenic patches (scleractinians Montastrea cavernosa, Siderastrea sp., and coralline algae) among sand to high-canopy black corals on rocky substrate. The black corals were mainly the greenish Antipathes gracilis (Fig. 1a) and a white-colored species, possibly Tanacetipathes spinescens (Fig. 1b; Wirtz and d’Acoz 2008), and also included the whip coral Stichopathes lutkeni. Colonies were largely ramified and formed canopies reaching 1–2 m height (Fig. 1c). The dense distribution of colonies between 35 and 50 m depth resembled a large underwater forest, intensified by the green coloration of A. gracilis (Fig. 1d). Canopies gave shelter to schools of fish, especially Paranthias furcifer, Clepticus africanus, and Lutjanus fulgens (Fig. 1e). In situ observation of canoes fishing and abandoned gear (Fig. 1f), as well as fishermen interviews, revealed that this area is heavily fished with occasional blasting. This reef may also be affected by the development of a deepwater port ~7 km from the area. The fragile structure of black corals in this hitherto undescribed and potentially unique ecosystem should be considered in the management and conservation of São Tomé’s reefs.